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book part or chapter

Uses of forward and reverse genetics in mice to study gene function

Argmann, C.A.
•
Dierich, A.
•
Auwerx, J.  
Ausubel, F.M.
•
Struhl, K.
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2006
Current Protocols in Molecular Biology

As the focus of human genetics shifts from Mendelian traits to complex diseases, a sophisticated genetic tool kit—with space for genetics (classical, molecular, statistical, and quantitative), metabolics, proteomics, bioinformatics, and mathematics—is required to elucidate their multifactorial traits and regulatory processes. Importantly, mouse resources optimized to study the actions of isolated genetic loci on a fixed background are insufficient on their own for studying intact polygenic networks and genetic interactions, and researchers must work in the context of experimental model systems that optimally mimic the genetic structure of human populations. The success of such phenogenomic approaches depend on the efficacy by which specific mutations (gene targeting) and variability (recombinant inbreeding) can be introduced into the mouse genome, and on the optimization of phenotyping analyses of the mutant mouse lines. This unit describes the basic genetic approaches used to in the study of mouse model systems

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Type
book part or chapter
DOI
10.1002/0471142727.mb29a01s73
Author(s)
Argmann, C.A.
Dierich, A.
Auwerx, J.  
Editors
Ausubel, F.M.
•
Struhl, K.
•
Smith, J.A
•
Seidman, J.G.
•
Moore, D.D.
•
Kingston, R.E.
Date Issued

2006

Publisher

Wiley

Published in
Current Protocols in Molecular Biology
Start page

29A.1

Series title/Series vol.

Current Protocols

Subjects

GEMMs

•

GRPs

•

phenotyping

•

forward genetics

•

reverse genetics

•

mouse

•

protocols

Written at

OTHER

EPFL units
LISP  
Available on Infoscience
April 17, 2009
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/37272
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